Aru Shah and the End of Time

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Aru Shah and the End of Time Page 14

by Roshani Chokshi


  Oh, thought Aru.

  The magical headband from Summer that Mini had thrown at him. Whoever wears this will forget something important. Welp. It had definitely worked. As soon as they were out of his sight, the Sleeper had forgotten all about the precious mounts.

  There was a beautiful burnished orange tiger. A stately peacock that trailed jewels. A stunningly white owl. But the creature that stole her breath was none other than the seven-headed horse. It trotted toward Aru, all of its heads lowering at once.

  “Thank you, daughter of Indra,” said the horse, speaking from all seven of its mouths in seven melodious voices. “You have freed us from imprisonment.”

  One by one, the mounts walked forward. The tiger nuzzled her hand. The peacock nipped her fingers affectionately. The owl lowered its head.

  “Merely call for us, and we will come to your aid, Pandava,” said the owl.

  They took off, leaping and flying and trotting into the air, until only the horse was left.

  “You have somewhere to be, don’t you?” asked the horse.

  Aru looked down at the waves on her knuckles and nodded. The third key—the sip of old age—was still out there.

  “I shall take you,” said the horse. “None can move faster than I, for I move at the speed of thought.”

  Aru had never ridden a horse. Unless you counted sitting on a rainbow-colored unicorn while revolving on a carousel and yelling Giddyup! (Which definitely shouldn’t count.) A step stool magically appeared on the left side of the horse. Aru clambered atop it, shoving the ball back into her pocket. She swung her legs over the horse’s broad back.

  “Are you ready, daughter of Indra?” it asked.

  “Nope,” said Aru. She took a deep breath. “But let’s go anyway.”

  I Really…REALLY…Wouldn’t Do That

  There are many ways to make an entrance. Aru, who had watched way too many movies, staunchly believed your three best options were:

  You could show up like Aragorn in the last Lord of the Rings movie and raise your sword while a bunch of ghosts spilled out behind you.

  You could show up like John McClane in every Die Hard movie, screaming “YIPPEE-KI-YAY!” while waving a machine gun.

  Or…

  You could show up like an actor in every Bollywood movie, with an invisible wind blowing through your hair and everyone suddenly dancing around you.

  But after today, she was going to have to change that list. Because honestly? Riding in on a seven-headed horse beat all those options.

  They burst through the Night Bazaar to a flurry of gasps. Shopping carts squealed and scattered. Tents leaped out of the way, tassels wrapping around them like someone hugging themselves after a bad fright. A raksha who had just purchased a snack from a street vendor dropped his food. A smaller raksha cackled, swooped down, and ate it.

  They crossed through worlds that had cities filled with monsters, and (she was almost certain) worlds where monsters made cities. She saw a giant scaly creature squish a mountain with its thumb, muttering, “Make a mountain out of a molehill, you say? Ha! How about making a mountain into a molehill! That’s far more interesting. Yes, yes.”

  They charged through a cloud bank. On the other side, there was nothing but a vast expanse of ocean. But it was unlike any ocean Aru had ever seen. It was not blue or gray or even greenish. It was as white as milk. A small stone island stuck out of the middle like a lump of oatmeal in a cereal bowl.

  “That was once the pedestal from which the Ocean of Milk was churned,” said the horse.

  Just like that, Aru knew where she was. In the museum’s panorama back home, there was an illustration of the Ocean of Milk. Long ago, a powerful sage cursed the gods, causing them to lose their immortality. Weakened and in trouble, they churned the ocean to get the nectar of immortality. When they started churning, poison burst into the air. The gods asked Shiva—the Lord of Destruction—to get rid of it. He drank it down, and the poison turned his throat blue.

  Aru always liked lying down in the panorama theater where it was cold and dark and silent, watching the stories of the gods and goddesses rotate around her. Which is how she knew that there had been a battle long ago over the nectar of immortality. The gods had not churned the ocean by themselves—they had needed the help of the asuras, the demons. But when the ocean finally gave up the secret of immortality, the gods tricked the asuras and took all the nectar for themselves.

  Aru shuddered. She wondered how long a demon could hold a grudge. They might not be able to live eternally like the gods, but they could be reincarnated from one life to the next. Forever and ever…

  The seven-headed horse began to descend. It slowed to a moderate clip once they reached the island’s shore. Past the sand dunes yawned the entrance of a large tunnel.

  Aru thought it would look old and creepy inside, but it turned out to be just an abandoned office space. Marble cubicles had been cut into either side of the tunnel. They were all unoccupied. Some contained corkboards pinned with photographs. A headset, like the kind a telemarketer might use (except these were made of gold and studded with diamonds) had been left behind on each desk. Every so often, she saw a vending machine. But they didn’t offer candy or chips. Instead they had things like “seven hours of sleep,” “a good daydream,” “a very good daydream” (with, Aru noticed, a strange winking face beside it), “a shot of eloquence,” and a miniature antibacterial hand sanitizer.

  Posters, covered with a thin layer of dust, still adorned the tunnels. A gleaming city of gold was featured on one of them. Scrawled across it were the words:

  COME VISIT THE CITY OF LANKA!

  THE PREMIER DESTINATION OF

  DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES!

  SERVICE: GOLD!

  FOOD: GOLD!

  ENTERTAINMENT: NOT GORY, BUT

  DEFINITELY HAS MOMENTS OF GORE!

  Another poster advertised an underwater city with a very attractive naga model, who was winking and baring shiny fangs:

  THE CITY OF SNAKES!

  COME FOR THE SCENERY, STAY FOR

  THE SLITHERING BEAUTIES!

  But wherever Aru looked, there was no sign of Mini.

  “This is the tourism headquarters of the Otherworld,” explained the horse. “But it’s currently closed. Nobody will disturb you while you’re here.”

  One part of the tunnel was boarded up. A large sign proclaimed NO TOUCHING! and CAUTION: UNDER RENOVATION. A bitter smell wafted between the planks of wood hammered over the opening.

  But there was enough space under the boards that someone the size of Mini (but not necessarily mini-size) might be able to squeeze through to the other side.

  It was here that the horse stopped. “This is where I leave you, daughter of Indra.” It knelt so she could dismount.

  “Thanks for the lift,” said Aru. Her legs felt wobbly when she slid off.

  “Call on us when you have need.”

  Hmm…What constituted need? Because she’d really love to show up to school on a seven-headed horse. All those sleek black cars would probably explode on the spot. The horse seemed to guess at what she was thinking, because it whinnied.

  “Urgent need,” it clarified.

  “Wait. What’s your name?”

  “Uchchaihshravas,” it replied.

  “Uchcha…Um, maybe I could just whistle?”

  The horse huffed.

  “So that’s a no on the whistling,” said Aru.

  “Declare your name to the sky. We shall hear and answer.”

  The horse bowed its seven heads, then took off the way it came. Aru didn’t stay to watch it disappear. She crawled under the planks, covering her nose with her hand. This place stank. Mini would probably be concerned that the whole room was full of toxic fumes.

  She found herself in a narrow alley. When it opened into a cave, Aru knew where the strange smell was coming from….

  In the center of the space stood a cauldron the size of a claw-footed bathtub. But the cauldron wasn’t ma
de of iron or steel…it was made of vapors. It was transparent enough that Aru could see blue liquid sloshing angrily inside it. Trying to contain a liquid with only vapors seemed like a really bad idea…and judging from the way the whole thing kept quivering, it looked like it was ready to burst at any moment.

  But there was also something solid inside, about the size of her shoe, floating on top of the blue liquid. The mehndi design on her fingers pulsed gently. Was that shoe the third key?

  If so, how was she supposed to get it out?

  Just behind the cauldron crouched a huge statue of Shiva, the Lord of Destruction. He bent over the cauldron, his mouth wide open, as if shocked by its contents. Aru couldn’t see the rest of the statue. It disappeared behind the ledge on which the cauldron bubbled.

  “Aru?” called a familiar voice.

  There, standing off to the side with a notebook in her hand and a pen in the other, was Mini.

  The two of them regarded each other warily. Aru wasn’t sure what to say. She had already apologized. But it never hurt to say I’m sorry again. And the truth was that Aru hadn’t come here just to save her own skin. She had come because Mini was her friend. Plus, she’d made a promise not to leave her behind. She might fib a little, but she never broke her promises.

  “Mini, I’m sorry—” she started.

  At the very same time, Mini said, “I may have overreacted.”

  “Ack! You go first!” they both said. Again at the same time.

  Now they glared.

  “Nose goes!” declared Aru, quickly smacking her nose. (Did it hurt a bit? Yes. Would she do it again to avoid having to discuss her feelings first? One hundred percent yes.)

  Mini, who had not reached for her nose, grumbled. “Fine!” she said. “All I was going to say was that maybe I shouldn’t have left you like that. I hate when people do that to me. And I know you didn’t meant to hurt anyone when you lit the—”

  “Apology accepted!” said Aru, feeling immensely relieved. “Now—”

  “I just want you to know that…that I understand how you feel,” continued Mini. “My parents, they, well, I love them. And they love me. My family is great. Honestly. But they didn’t think I’d be a Pandava. They thought it was a mistake. I guess it just meant a lot that you believed…in me. And I get that maybe you felt like that, too—like an impostor—and probably that’s why you lit the lamp.”

  Aru didn’t say anything for a moment. She wasn’t mad or embarrassed. She was grateful. She’d found someone she could breathe easier around, and it hurt. In a good way.

  “I do believe in you, Mini,” she said. “I think you’re really smart. Definitely a bit on the neurotic side, but totally smart. And brave, too.”

  She meant it. With all her heart. Maybe Mini could see that, because she smiled and stuck out her elbow. Aru bumped it and she knew they were good.

  “Did you see that thing floating in the cauldron?” asked Aru.

  “Yup. I’m guessing it’s the third key, but I don’t know how to get it out. Do we have to sip from the cauldron?”

  Sip from that bubbling vat of gross blue liquid?

  “Ew…” said Aru. “Well, I already bit a book, so if anyone’s going to be sipping whatever that is, it’s not me.”

  “That is poison. Specifically, halahala poison.”

  “Okay, definitely not drinking it.”

  “It’s the same poison that was released when the gods churned the Ocean of Milk. It will kill us. Please tell me you read the sign.” She pointed to a poster off to the side.

  Aru skimmed it briefly. Once she read LIKELIHOOD OF DISMEMBERMENT, she stopped.

  “Nope.”

  “According to the warnings, if you touch the cauldron, the whole thing will explode,” said Mini. “It happens once a year, kinda like a volcano, which is why this place is blocked off. We’d both die.”

  Then Aru had an idea. “Maybe I can call in a favor.”

  She told Mini about the cage full of godly mounts. When she was finished, Mini looked impressed and even a little envious.

  “A seven-headed horse?” she asked. “Can you imagine all of its neural pathways? That would be fascinating to study!”

  “Focus, Mini!”

  “Okay, okay. Well, you can’t even call in that favor. The rules specify that no animals may drain the poison. Apparently, it can turn them into huge monsters that eat everything around them.”

  “Ughhhhh.”

  “Details, details,” said Mini, chewing her pencil. “There’s gotta be a trick to this.”

  “What about creating an illusion with your mirror?” asked Aru.

  “Not possible.”

  Mini drew out the compact. It shimmered, but it wouldn’t conjure anything. And Aru’s Ping-Pong ball didn’t offer any clues, either. It wasn’t even glowing.

  “It’s like a magical dead zone,” said Mini. “I don’t even think our gifts from the Seasons will work. I couldn’t get the bakery box from Spring to open, and the only stuff around here is rocks and the big ole fire.”

  Huh?

  Mini pointed upward and Aru’s mouth fell open. A giant chandelier of fire hung from the ceiling. The flames twisted, and embers sparked but didn’t fall to the ground. It looked weirdly shiny, as if the whole thing were encased in glass like a chemistry vial full of blue and gold flames.

  “I feel like the fire and the poison are connected somehow,” said Mini, chewing on the pencil. “If we touch either of them, they’ll explode. But at least nothing will get past the entrance.”

  “Wait. If the fire and poison can’t get out of this room, why has the entire tourism office been evacuated?”

  “The smell. Also, they have designated vacation days. At least, that’s what the sign says,” said Mini. “This is the weirdest tourist spot.”

  Aru shrugged. Considering that the last place her class went to on a field trip was a museum of lunch boxes, a poison volcano sounded way cooler. And the Otherworld apparently thought so, too. A brightly painted wooden panel stood next to the cauldron, awaiting the next photo op. Visitors could stick their faces through a cutout hole (allowances had been made for horns, cobra hoods, and multiple heads) and pretend they’d drunk the poison. On the bottom there was a bucket for donations along with a small sign: THANKS FOR SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL HAUNTING!

  Aru circled the cauldron. “So…short of trying to drink this thing and definitely dying, there’s no way?”

  “I didn’t say that. I just said we can’t approach it like anyone who’s had any experience with magic. A magical person would try to trick their way into emptying the cauldron.”

  Mini’s gaze had turned intense. She looked at the cauldron, then back at her notebook, then back at the cauldron. “It’s a liquid.”

  Aru thought it would be uncharitable to say DUH, so she just nodded.

  “If you heat liquid, it can turn into a gas. Some of the poisonous liquid in the caldron has become the poisonous vapors that are holding the liquid.”

  Aru’s head hurt. Was this really the time and place for a chemistry lesson?

  “That’s the trick,” said Mini, talking to herself. “They don’t want us to think with magic. We’ve got to think about it like any ordinary person would….I’ve got a plan.”

  Mini seemed so shocked by the idea that she could have a plan that it ended up sounding more like I’ve got a plan?

  “Awesome!” said Aru. “What’s it involve?”

  “We’ve got to break it,” she said, her whole face brightening. “And not with magic.”

  “Wait. Say what now?”

  Mini reached for a small pebble on the ground.

  “Um, Mini…?”

  And then she hurled it straight at the gigantic cauldron full of poison, hollering, “For science!!!”

  Welp, She Did It

  If Aru had been politely indifferent to science before, now she straight up hated it. She watched as the pebble soared from Mini’s hand. It was a valiant throw. Nice arc. Very
dramatic.

  But the pebble fell short and dropped about a hairbreadth away from the cauldron. Aru breathed a sigh of relief. They were safe.

  But then the infernal pebble did what pebbles can’t help but do:

  It rolled.

  Then tapped the cauldron.

  “Maybe that wasn’t too strong of a—” Aru stopped as the cauldron began to quiver more violently. Its vapor sides began to swirl. “Nope. I take it back. We’re dead.”

  “We’re not dead,” said Mini. “I just wanted to stir up the liquid a little. We’ve got to hit the fire next.”

  “Spewing poison isn’t enough for you?” demanded Aru. “You have to add fire to it?”

  “The way this room has been designed, the heat from the fire above has turned some of the poison liquid into a gas,” reasoned Mini. “If we bring down all of the fire, it should vaporize all of the poison and leave behind only the third key!”

  The vapor shell of the cauldron began to split. The cave ceiling trembled, and bits of black rock flaked down. The chandelier of fire swung back and forth.

  “Gather as many rocks as you can and start throwing them at the fire,” said Mini.

  “What if they hit the cauldron by mistake? We’ll—”

  “You said you believed in me!” shouted Mini. “So believe me!”

  Aru clenched her jaw. “All right,” she said.

  She gathered up rocks, and together the two of them started pelting the fire. A cracking sound rolled through the cave. Aru looked up—her guess had been right! The fire had been encased in something. And whatever it was that had been protecting them from the flames was beginning to break.

  Fire tumbled down in long, flaming ribbons. In a moment, it would meet the poisonous vapor and liquid of the cauldron.

  “Run!” shouted Mini. “To the entrance!”

  Aru ran just as blue plumes of poison spiraled into the air. She gagged. The smell was awful. Her toe had barely crossed the threshold when she heard a boom behind her. The cauldron exploded. Out of the corner of her eye, Aru saw a giant wave of rising poison liquid.

 

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